Can Bitcoin Be Both Money and Collateral? The Saylor-Ammous Debate

When Michael Saylor, the visionary behind Strategy, unveiled his latest Bitcoin framework at a major Middle East conference, it reignited one of crypto’s most persistent debates: What is Bitcoin really—currency or commodity?

Two Philosophies on Bitcoin’s Nature

Saylor has built his reputation on a thesis that fundamentally diverges from Bitcoin’s original whitepaper vision of peer-to-peer cash. Speaking with economist Saifedean Ammous on Cointelegraph’s Chain Reaction, it became clear that even among Bitcoin’s most committed believers, interpretations diverge sharply. “He doesn’t view Bitcoin as money in the conventional sense,” Ammous explained. “Saylor sees it more as a hard asset—similar to crude oil—that can underpin various financial instruments.”

This distinction matters because it shapes how institutional investors approach Bitcoin accumulation. Saylor has engineered a sophisticated financial architecture to capitalize on this asset-backed philosophy, while Ammous maintains that Bitcoin’s monetary nature will ultimately prevail.

Strategy’s Financial Innovation Playbook

Since committing to a Bitcoin treasury strategy five years ago, Strategy has accumulated 671,268 BTC through multiple creative mechanisms. Beyond traditional equity offerings through MSTR shares, the company has tapped convertible debt markets, raising billions through senior notes convertible to equity. More recently, Saylor introduced multiple classes of perpetual preferred stock (STRK, STRF, STRD, STRC) to institutional investors, effectively creating a Bitcoin-backed financial ecosystem.

This architecture turns Bitcoin into collateral for debt products—precisely what Ammous described as “all kinds of fiat games” that will flourish while traditional currency printing continues.

When Asset Becomes Money

Ammous doesn’t dismiss Saylor’s framework but reframes it as a temporary stage rather than Bitcoin’s endgame. “It’s an academic question with limited real-world significance,” he noted, before laying out his counter-thesis: global monetary expansion averages 7%-15% annually, forcing institutions and individuals to treat Bitcoin acquisition as foundational capital.

“As more people and businesses accumulate Bitcoin as pristine capital to access affordable debt, the natural consequence follows,” Ammous argued. “Bitcoin stops being viewed as an asset on top of the fiat system and becomes the system itself.”

The Inevitable Shift

Ammous sees Saylor’s financial products as stepping stones rather than destinations. Every convertible note, every preferred share, every leveraged instrument ultimately requires purchasing Bitcoin—meaning aggregate holdings climb, circular economies strengthen, and Bitcoin’s monetary credentials grow stronger.

His recent advisory role with Africa Bitcoin Corporation—focused on retail adoption and local circular economies—reflects this conviction that Bitcoin’s path leads from commodity speculation to monetary reality, independent of how Wall Street financializes it in the interim.

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